1-40 Exocytosis and Endocytosis Flashcards

1
Q

T/F: Both N-linked glycosylation and O-linked glycosylation occur post-translationally and surgars are added to proteins one at a time

A

False: N-linked glycosylation occurs co-translationally, while o-linked glycosylation occurs post-translationally.

In N-linked glycosylation, a preformed oligosaccharide of 14 sugars is added (in ER), while in O-linked glycosylation, sugars are added to proteins one at a time (in golgi).

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2
Q

What is a proteoglycans?

A

Proteoglycans typically contain greater than or equal to 95% of carbohydrate by mass and contain a very small core protein.
If it has a glycosaminoglyan (GAG) chain, then it is a proteoglycan.
Synthesized in the ER

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3
Q

What is a glycoprotein?

A

Mass of carbohydrate in each glycoprotein varies from about 2-80%
Number of carbs varies from one to hundreds.
The structure of each carbohydrate unit in a single protein can vary-this is called microheterogeneity

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4
Q

Why are there no carbohydrates extending from proteins (creating glycocalyx) on the cytosolic side?

A

Pg. 617 in notes

Enzymes responsible for addition of sugars are not located in the cytosol, rather they are within the lumen of the ER and golgi

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5
Q

What differentiates the A allele, B allele, and O allele?

A

The ABO blood group antigens are determiend by a SINGLE genetic locus, the ABO locus, that encodes glgcosyltransferase.
The A allele encodes a GalNAc transferase.
The B allele encodes a Gal transferase.
The O allele does not encode a functional protein

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6
Q

T/F: Proteins destined for secretory vesicles are sorted and packaged in the cis-golgi network.

A

False: They are sorted and packaged in the Trans-golgi network

They have special surface properties that cause them to aggregate in the lumen of the trans Golgi network, which allows them to be packaged into vesicles at very high concentration. In this way, secretory cells can release large quantities of protein very quickly in response to a trigger

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7
Q

T/F: Both the constitutive exocytosis pathway (default pathway) and regulated pathway require signals to travel to the plasma membrane for secretion

A

False: In the default pathway, all proteins passing through the Golgi will go to PM in vesicles unless directed elsewhere by specific signal and this operates continually. In the regulated pathway, secretory vesicles bud off trans Golgi and accumulate near the PM and fuse to release contents ONLY in response to an extracellular signal

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8
Q

T/F: Both pinocytosis and phagocytosis involve the upatake of fluid and small molecules to deliver to lysosome in a continuous process

A

False: Pinocytosis involves the uptake of fluid and small molecules in small vesicles and is a continuous process in all eukaryotic cells. Phagocytosis involves the uptake of large particles in large vesicles and requires receptor activation at cell surface and occurs in specialized cells (macrophages and neutrophils)

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9
Q

T/F: The early endosome resembles an “immature” lysosome

A

False: The early endosome is rpimarily a “sorter” and is located near the PM. The late endosome resembles an “immature” lysosome and may even become a lysosome via uptake of lysosomal proteins

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10
Q

What are the 3 “fates” or pathways that endocytosed receptors may follow?

A
  1. Recycling back to the PM
  2. Degradation (sometimes used for receptor downregulation)
  3. Transcytosis, which occurs in polarized cells with different PM domains
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11
Q

What are the 3 major pathways in which materials are delivered to lysosomes?

A
  1. Endocytosis (pinocytosis)
  2. Phagocytosis
  3. Autophagy
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12
Q

What is autophagy

A

The digestion of obsolete cell parts; a double membrane surrounds an organelle forming an autophagosome which then fuses with a late endosome/lysosome

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13
Q

What is the cause of mucopolysaccharidoses?

A

Defect in enzyme required for degradation of glycosaminoglycans

Hurler Disease

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14
Q

What is the cause of oligosaccharidoses?

A

Defect in the enzyme required for degradation of oligosaccharides

Schindler Disease

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15
Q

What is the cause of Sphingolipidoses?

A

Defect in the enzyme required for degradation of sphingolipids

Gaucher & Tay-Sachs Disease

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16
Q

What is the cause of Inclusion-cell disease?

A

Defect in enzyme required for making M6P tag…which then fails to target to lysosome and the lysosomal proteins will not make it to the lysosome and large accumulations of products will result in the lysosome

17
Q

What is the structural difference between a glycoprotein and a proteoglycan?

A

Glycoproteins have bonded oligosaccharides that don’t have serial repeat. Proteoglycans have bonded glycosaminoglycans with no serial repeat.
Glycoproteins are mostly protein with little carbohydrate, while proteoglycans are mostly carbohydrate with a small core protein

18
Q

What class of enzyme is responsible for adding sugars to O-linked glycoproteins?

A

Glycosyltransferases add sugars

19
Q

What is the genetic difference between individuals whose blood types are type A vs B vs O vs AB?

A

They differ in the enzymes encoded at their ABO locus. Type A have one (AO) or two (AA) A alleles encoding a GalNAc transferase. Type B have one (BO) or two (BB) B alleles encoding a Gal transferase, Type AB have one A and one B allele, and type O has two null alleles encoding non-functional enzymes

20
Q

What is the biochemical difference in blood cells that are type A vs B vs O vs AB?

A

They differ in the terminal sugars on the glycoproteins and glycolipids on the surface of the blood cells. Type A has a terminal GalNAc, type B has a terminal Gal, type AB has both types, and type O has neither

21
Q

Where are how are glycoproteins degraded in the cell?

A

Degraded in lysosome by acidic hydrolases. First endoglycosidases remove oligosaccharides from proteins, then glycosidases act sequentially to remove individuals sugars in reverse order to the way they were built. The protein portion is degraded by proteases.